|
In an article I wrote in March on silver, I suggested a major dollar rally
was imminent. As it turned out, the dollar rally had begun at the end of 2004,
but it took until the summer for the move to exceed previous rally sizes and
thus confirm its status.
Now in September, we have the dollar at another interesting juncture. Since
2001, the US Dollar Index traced out an Elliott impulse wave until December
of 2004. The chart below shows that major bear move as well as the 65 week
moving average or long term market changes. A three and half year down move
shaved nearly a third off the dollar's value compared to a basket of major
currencies. That move has completed as it hit the multi-decade support at the
80 level. Naturally, such a strong support line may suggest the bear is over,
but as stated before, I do not believe the dollar bear market is over by a
long way.
The second article I wrote on the 4th June entitled "The Curious Case of the
Dollar Rally" suggested an initial rally of the 2001-2004 bear up to 91 based
on a study of other smaller rallies during the dollar plunge. Four weeks after
that article, the dollar topped out at 90.77 and has been on a downturn since
then. So far, this drop has hit a low of 86, but how much further can it go?
The chart below shows the progress of our dollar rally.
As before, I stay with my WXYcorrection pattern with the only surprise being
the length the final leg took from late April until early July. A WXY corrective
pattern is a rarer form than the normal ABC zigzag or flat corrections, but
is nevertheless valid. However, can one say that this 6-month correction is
over and the dollar bear market is about to embark on its next and possibly
most damaging leg down?
On the one hand, "yes" is a reasonable answer. After all, the rally
has retraced to the predicted 91 mark, it is a complete corrective pattern
in and of itself and it has run longer than smaller degree rallies. All seems
done and dusted, so can we now go short the dollar and long gold and silver?
Well, I have some observations that make me wonder if we are not yet over
the correction. Firstly, the 6 months elapsed still doesn't look long enough
for a higher degree correction. Six months constitutes 14% of the time of the
prior 42-month bear down leg. Statistical studies of Elliott wave patterns
suggest that nearer 30% is a better figure. That would mean the current two-month
down move is only the midpoint of our overall correction to be followed by
one more rally before the big plunge.
Secondly, if the rally from December did end at 90.77 in July, we would expect
to see a five-part impulse wave begin the new bear leg. The numbers (1) to (5) in
the chart marks this proposed impulse wave. It looks neat enough at a superficial
level, but one of the classical rules of Elliott Wave Theory stipulates that
wave 4 should not infringe on the price territory of wave 2. This it has done
as shown by the horizontal line joining (2) and (4) - note that
wave (4) has crossed over than line. I would also add that wave (3) doesn't
look like a wave 3 to me either. So, it looks overall that we have finished
wave A and are now somewhere in wave B before moving back up to the 91 level
some months from now in a wave C.
I could be wrong, but chart interpretations are all about probabilities and
the probability slightly favours a continued rally into early 2006. What would
disprove this interpretation? Quite simply, we need to see a significant breach
of the old low of 80.39 hit in late December (see chart). Until that point
is reached, I am personally cautious but, as ever, a long-term bull on gold
and silver!
Roland Watson writes the investment newsletter The New Era
Investor that can be purchased for an annual subscription of $99. In
issue 7 out next week, it is noted that only 1% of the capital markets is
now tied up in gold, but what was the percentage in 1980 when gold was riding
high and how does that reflect on the future price of gold when another 1980-type
crisis hits? Read issue 7 to find out.
To view a sample copy of the newsletter, please go to www.newerainvestor.com and
click on the "View Sample Issue Here" link to the right.
Comments are invited by emailing the author at newerainvestor@yahoo.co.uk
|